Founded in 2007, Care.com now connects about 32 million caregiver and parent members—focusing largely on matching families with individual nannies and babysitters. Parents also turn to the site to find and research daycare centers in their geographical areas.

The day-care center listings in question were taken down from the site March 7, according to Nancy Bushkin, a Care.com spokesperson. That was also the day of the company’s fourth-quarter earnings release.

She said the number is different from the Journal’s analysis because the company filters daycare center listings in its database through algorithms to “optimize the experience,” adding that the Journal saw only a subset of its total listings.

In its securities filing, Care.com said it would no longer allow caregivers to begin applying for jobs on the site until the company had completed a “preliminary screening,” which Care.com previously told the Journal included checking multi-jurisdictional criminal databases and the National Sex Offender Public Website. The company also created a new board committee to oversee the company’s safety and cybersecurity programs.